Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A spoiler is an element of a disseminated summary or description of a media narrative that reveals significant plot elements, with the implication that the experience of discovering the plot naturally, as the creator intended it, has been robbed ("spoiled") of its full effect.
A spoiler is an automotive aerodynamic device whose intended design function is to 'spoil' unfavorable air movement across the body of a vehicle in motion, usually manifested as lift, turbulence, or drag. Spoilers on the front of a vehicle are often called air dams.
Wikipedia articles may include spoilers and no spoiler warnings. A spoiler is a piece of information about a narrative work (such as a book, film, television series, or a video game) that reveals plot points or twists. Articles on the Internet sometimes feature a spoiler warning to alert readers to spoilers in the text, which they may then ...
SPOILER ALERT: This article contains spoilers for “The Exorcist: Believer,” now playing in theaters. After 50 years, “The Exorcist” franchise is back with “The Exorcist: Believer,” and ...
In aeronautics, a spoiler (sometimes called a lift spoiler or lift dumper) is a device which intentionally reduces the lift component of an airfoil in a controlled way. Most often, spoilers are plates on the top surface of a wing that can be extended upward into the airflow to spoil the streamline flow.
Nicholas Hoult, Leslie Bibb, Adrienne C. Moore, and J.K. Simmons are among the jurors in <i>Juror #2</i> Credit - Courtesy of Warner Bros. Warning: This story includes spoilers for Juror #2 ...
By which we mean Hometown Dates are officially over and Grant has narrowed down his final three. According to spoiler sleuth Reality Steve, Grant's final four contestants were: Juliana Pasquarosa.
A spoiler campaign in the United States is often one that cannot realistically win but can still determine the outcome by pulling support from a more competitive candidate. [46] The two major parties in the United States, the Republican Party and Democratic Party, have regularly won 98% of all state and federal seats. [47]